When I decided to switch to Fedora, I wanted a safety net. I had a 500GB SSD, so I bought an additional 2TB SSD, so I could make full disk image backups and be able to store 3 of them (I used full disk encryption, so my disk image backups were the full 500GB). And I dutifully made backups, either monthly, before I made a big change, or before a major update. Been doing this for nearly two years now and I haven't used a single backup image even once. It's almost disappointing, in a perverse sort of way. I was looking forward to having to learn stuff by fixing things that break, but nothing ever does!
Robotabs or syrup?
I already cancelled my Dashlane, after they did an AMA on Reddit during the blackout. I don't support companies who cross picket lines.
I like how they made helping Reddit improve to be optional. I suspect I'm not the only one who doesn't feel inclined to help them in any way.
Can't wait to see Reddit Corporate deciding whether or not a particular post is really gonewildgrannies material!
How is it legal to make up a fee then offer a paid membership to avoid the fee you just made up? How is that different from the mob guys that would collect your "insurance" membership so that you didn't incur a "business burned down" fee?
Wow, way to read into what I said! My point was that you enjoyed that privilege, for your whole life, whether you liked it or not, and that puts you in a better position to handle any shit you might take for it now. Better off than someone might be who didn't have the advantage of enjoying that privilege. That's not saying you have to surrender that privilege or that somebody else is gonna come and take it, it just acknowledges that it's a thing and you benefited from it. All that stuff about taking away your privilege came from you, and tbh it's a little bit strange of a focus when I was simply acknowledging that it existed and that I benefited from mine. I'd give it up in a second if I could, honestly, because it's not something I earned.
It would only work if enough people do it to show up on their metrics.
First season was like April '22. Second season production is interrupted by the strike, and I don't think that's going to be resolved soon. I'm pretty sure it will be at least two years before we see season 2, and very likely even longer than that. Even if the people involved read my post right now, decided to end the strike right now, just because I said I was worried about this show, started up production again this very afternoon, it'd still be a stretch to see season 2 airing by April of next year. September '24 is more realistic and even that depends on the strike not going that much longer. If it goes to '25, I think it will kill Severance's momentum.
I worry about the long gap between season 1 and season 2. A lot of shows have really suffered with such long gaps, especially ones that are as serialized as this one is.
Janeway, when she was talking about making sense of temporal paradoxes.